Political declaration of the high-level meeting of the General Assembly
on the fight against tuberculosis
A/RES/73/3
HIV and AIDS, and other co-morbidities such as diabetes, that one quarter of the
world’s people are infected with the bacterium that causes the disease, and that
millions of people ill with tuberculosis are missing out o n quality care each year,
including on access to affordable diagnostic tests and treatment, especially in
developing countries;
7.
Express serious concern that, despite these commitments, tuberculosis
remains a cause of an enormous burden of illness, suffering and death, and that stigma
and discrimination because of the disease bring enormous costs for individuals
affected by tuberculosis and their families, and acknowledge that an adequate
multisectoral and intersectoral engagement in the fight against th e disease is needed,
and that the world needs to refocus efforts on actions and investments, including in
research, needed to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals target of ending the
tuberculosis epidemic by 2030;
8.
Recognize that tuberculosis affects populations inequitably and
contributes to the cycle of ill health and poverty, that malnutrition and inadequate
living conditions contribute to the spread of tuberculosis and its impact upon the
community, and that tuberculosis is fundamentally linked to a majority of the leading
development challenges addressed by the 2030 Agenda;
9.
Further recognize that tuberculosis is both preventable and curable, yet
40 per cent of people newly affected by tuberculosis are missed by public health
reporting systems, and millions do not receive quality care each year, and that
tuberculosis can only be eliminated through prevention efforts and access to quality
diagnosis, treatment and care, including access to affordable diagnostic tools and drug
treatment, effective people-centred and community-based models of care supported
by integrated care services, as well as financing innovations, and additional
investments in research and development and in the affordable delivery of
tuberculosis programmes, especially in developing countries, and recognize that
countries that are transitioning from donor to domestic funding face new challenges
that may have a negative impact on earlier gains in the fight against tuberculosis;
10. Recognize that, even though tuberculosis is the leading global cause of
death of people living with HIV, in 2016 less than half of the estimated number of
cases of tuberculosis in people living with HIV were found and notified, and less than
60 per cent of known tuberculosis patients were tested for HIV, precluding treatment
and resulting in preventable deaths;
11. Recognize that multidrug-resistant tuberculosis is estimated to account for
one third of deaths due to antimicrobial resistance globally, and that many of the
Sustainable Development Goals may not be attainable if we fail to address
antimicrobial resistance, that the grave risks to individual and public health posed by
multidrug-resistant tuberculosis are cause for alarm, that only 25 per cent of the
estimated number of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis cases were diagnosed and
notified in 2016, such that the vast majority of those in need still lack access to high quality prevention, treatment and care services and that inadequate investment in
tuberculosis case detection is a key obstacle to meeting tuberculosis treatment goals,
and furthermore acknowledge that the response to multidrug-resistant and extensively
drug-resistant tuberculosis to date has been insufficient, despite the introduction of
new rapid diagnostic tests, efforts to scale up disease management and international
financing, such as from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,
including to help support drug supply, yet globally just over 50 per cent of patients
enrolled in treatment for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis are successfully treated;
12. Acknowledge that multidrug-resistant tuberculosis is a key component of
the global challenge of antimicrobial resistance, and express grave concern that the
scope and scale of multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis
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